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CHAPTER
VIII - THE
PUBLIC SERVICE
106.Public
Service Commission.
107.Appointment,
etc., of public officers.
108.Appointment,
etc., of members of Kenya Police Force.
109.Attorney
General.
110.Controller
and Auditor-General.
111.Appointment
of Permanent Secretaries, Ambassadors etc.
112.Pensions
laws and protection of pensions rights.
113.Power to
withhold pensions, etc.
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CHAPTER VIII
THE PUBLIC SERVICE
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Public Service Commission.
7 of 1984, s.4,
4 of 1988, s. 6,
17 of 1990, s. 5.
Cap. 16.
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106. (1) There shall be a Public Service Commission
which shall consist of a chairman, a deputy
chairman and fifteen other members
(2) The members
of the Commission shall be appointed by the
President.
(3) Subject
to subsection (4), a person shall not be qualified
to be appointed as a member of the Commission
if:-
(a) he is,
or has at any time been, a member of the National
Assembly, or he has at any time been a member
of either House of the National Assembly formerly
established for Kenya, a member (other than
ex officio, an appointed or a nominated member) of any Legislative
Council established for Kenya at any time
before 12th December, 1963; or
(b) he is,
or has at any time been, nominated as a candidate
for election as a member of the National Assembly,
or of a former Provincial Council, Regional
Assembly or Legislative Council; or
(c) he is,
or has at any time been, the holder of an
office in any political organisation that
sponsors or other otherwise supported, a candidate
for election as a former house of the National
Assembly or of any such House of the National Assembly, former Provincial
Council, Regional Assembly or Legislative
Council.
(4) The disqualifications
referred to in subsection (3) shall cease
to be disqualifications in respect of a person
when Parliament has been dissolved on two
occasions after that Person ceased to be such
a member, candidate or holder of office.
(5) Subject
to subsection (7), the office of a member
of the Commission shall become vacant:-
(a) at the
expiration of three years from the date of
his appointment; or
(b) if he
accepts any office the holding of which, if
he were not a member of the Commission, would
make him ineligible for appointment to the
office of member of
the Commission.
(6) The President
may remove a member of the Commission from
office only for failure to discharge the functions
of his office (whether arising from infirmity
of body or mind or from any other cause) or
for misbehaviour, and shall not be so removed
except in accordance with this section.
(7) A member
of the Commission shall be removed from office
by the President if the question of his removal
from office has been referred to a tribunal
appointed under subsection (8) and the tribunal
has recommended to the President that he ought
to be removed from office for inability as
aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
(8) If the
President considers that the question of removing
a member of the Commission under this section
ought to be investigated, then:-
(a) the President
shall appoint a tribunal which shall consist
of a chairman and four other members selected
by the President
from among persons:-
(i) who
hold or have held office as judge of the High
Court or judge of appeal; or
(ii) who
are qualified to be appointed as judges of
the High Court under section 61 (3); or
(iii) upon
whom the rank of Senior Counsel has been conferred
by the President under section 17 of the Advocates
Act, 1989; and
(b) the tribunal
shall inquire into the matter and report on
the facts thereof to the President and recommend
to him whether the member ought to be removed
under this section.
(9) If the
question of removing a member of the Commission
has been referred to a tribunal under this
section, the President may suspend that member
from the exercise of the functions of his
office and the suspension may at any time
be revoked by the President, and shall in
any case cease to have effect if the tribunal
recommends to the President that the member should not be removed.
(c) in subsection
(10), by inserting the expression”, subject
to subsections (5), (7) and (9)” immediately
after the words “other member shall”.
(10) If the
office of chairman of the Commission is vacant
or the chairman is for any reason unable to
exercise the functions of his office, then,
until a person has been appointed to and has
assumed the functions of that office or until
the person holding that office has resumed
those functions, as the case may be, the deputy
chairman or, if the office of deputy chairman
is vacant or the deputy chairman is for any
reason unable to perform the functions of
the office of chairman, such one of the other
members as the President may appoint shall
act as chairman; and the deputy chairman or
the other member shall , subject to subsections
(5), (7) and (9), continue to act until a
person has been appointed to the office of
chairman and has assumed the functions of
that office or, as the case may be, until
the person in whose place he is acting has
assumed or resumed those functions.
(11) If the
office of a member of the Commission other
than the chairman is vacant or if such a member
is acting as chairman under subsection (10)
or is for any other reason unable to exercise
the functions of his office, the President
may appoint a person who is qualified to be
appointed to be a member to act in place of
that member; and a person so appointed shall,
subject to subsections (5), (7) and (9), continue
to act until a person has been appointed to
the office in which he is acting and has assumed
the functions of that office or, as the case
may be, until the person in whose place he
is acting has resumed those functions.
(12) Subject
to this Chapter,
the Commission shall, in the exercise of its
functions under this Constitution, not be
subject to the direction
control of any other person or authority.
(13) Subject
to this Chapter, the Commission may be regulation
or otherwise regulate its own procedure and,
with the consent of the President, may confer
powers or impose duties
on any public officer or authority
for the purpose of the discharge of its functions.
(14) The Commission
may, subject to its rules of procedure, act
notwithstanding a vacancy in its member ship
or the absence of a member and its proceedings
shall not be invalidated by the presence or
participation of a person not entitled to
be present at or to participate in those proceedings:
Provided that any decision of the Commission shall require the concurrence
of a majority of all the members thereof.
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Appointment etc., of public officers.
7 of 1982, s. 8. 7 of 1984, s. 5.
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107. (1) Subject to this Constitution,
the power to appoint persons to hold or act
in offices in the public service and in service
of local authorities (including the power
to confirm appointments), the power to exercise
disciplinary control over persons holding
or acting in those offices and the power to
remove those persons from office shall vest
in the Public Service Commission:
Providing that the Commission may,
with the approval of the President and subject
to such conditions as it thinks fit, by directions
in writing delegate any of its powers under
this section to any one or more of its members
or to any officer in the public service or,
in the case of appointments to the service
of local authorities, to particular local
authorities.
(2) Subject
to this section and section 106 (12), provision
may be made by or under an Act of Parliament
for prescribing the manner
of the exercise of the functions of
the Public Service Commission under this section
and for any matters incidental or supplementary
to the exercise of those functions.
(3) No person
shall be appointed under this section to or
to act in an office on the personal staff
of the President except with the concurrence of the President.
(4) Subsection
(1) shall not apply in relation to any of
the following offices in the public service:-
(a) The office
of a Judge of the High Court or the Court
of Appeal;
(b) The office
of Attorney-General;
(c) The office
of Attorney-General;
(d) So far
as relates to appointments thereof or to act
therein, the office of Chief Secretary, Permanent
Secretary, Secretary to the Cabinet, Director
of Personnel or Commissioner of Police;
(e) The office
of Ambassador, High Commissioner or other
principal representative of Kenya in another
country;
(f) An office
to which section 69 (which relates to offices within the jurisdiction of the Judicial
Service Commission) applies; or
(g) An office
in the Kenya Police Force to which section
108 (20 (b) applies.
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Appointment, etc., of members of Kenya Police Force
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108. (1) The
power to appoint persons to hold or act in
offices in the Kenyan Police Force (except
the office of Commissioner of Police), including
the power to confirm appointments, the power
to exercise disciplinary control over persons
holding or acting in those offices and the
power to remove those persons from office
shall vest---
(a)
in the case of offices of or above the rank of Assistant
Inspector, or such rank other than the rank
of Assistant Inspector as may be specified
for the purposes of this section by under
an Act of Parliament, in the Public Service
Commission;
(b)
in the case of offices below the rank of Assistant
Inspector, or such other rank as may be specified
as aforesaid, in the Commissioner of Police;
Provided that---
(i) the Commission may, by
directions in writing and subject to
such conditions as it
thinks fit, delegate any of it powers under
this section to any one
or more members of the Commission or
to the Commissioner;
(ii) the Commissioner may,
by directions given in such manner as
he thinks fit and subject to such conditions as he thinks fit, delegate
any of his powers under this section to any
member of the Kenya Police Force.
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Attorney General. 14 of 1986,
s. 4, 17 of 1990, s. 6.
Cap. 16. (1986)
Cap.16.
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109.
(1) The
Attorney-General shall be appointed by the
President.
(2)
If the office of Attorney-General is vacant or if
the Attorney-General is for any reason unable
to exercise the functions of his office, the
President may appoint a person to act as Attorney-General,
and a person so appointed shall, subjects
to subsections (4), (6) and (8), continue
to act until a person has been appointed to
the office of Attorney-General and has assumed
the functions of that office or, as the case
may be, until the person in whose place he
is acting has resumed those functions.
(3)
A person shall not be qualified to be appointed
to hold or to act in the office of Attorney-General
unless he holds and has held for a total period
of not less than five years one or other of
the qualifications specified in paragraphs
(a), (b), (c) and (d) of section 12 (1) of
the Advocates Act as in force on 12th
December, 1963.
(4)
Subject to subsection (6), the Attorney-General
shall vacate his office when he attains such
age as may be prescribed by Parliament.
(5)
The Attorney-General may be removed from office
only for inability to exercise the functions
of his office (whether arising from infirmity
of body or mind or any other cause) or for
misbehaviour, and shall not be removed except
in accordance with this section.
(6)
The Attorney-General shall be removed form office
by the President if the question of his removal
from office has been referred to a tribunal
appointed under subsection (7) and the tribunal
has recommended to the President that he ought
to be removed for inability as aforesaid or
for misbehaviour.
(7) If
the President considers that the question
of removing the Attorney-General under this
section ought to be investigate, then--
(a) The President
shall appoint
a tribunal which shall consist of a
chairman and four other members selected by
the President form among persons—
(i) who hold or have held
the office as judge of the
High Court
or judge of appeal; or
(ii) who are
qualified to be appointed as judges of the
High
Court under section 62 (13); or
(i)
upon whom the rank of Senior Counsel has been conferred
by the President under section 17 of the Advocates,
Act; and
(b) the tribunal shall inquire
into the matter and report on the facts thereof
to the President and recommend to him whether
the Attorney-General ought to be removed under
this section
(7)
If the question of removing the Attorney-General
has been referred to a tribunal under this
section, the President may suspend the Attorney-General
from the exercise of the functions of his
office and any such suspension may at any
time be revoked by the President, and shall
in any case cease to have effect if the tribunal
recommends to the President that the Attorney-General
should not be removed.
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Controller and Auditor General 14 of 1986 s. 5, 17 of 1990,
s, 6.
Cap.16.
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110. (1) The Controller and Auditor-General
shall be appointed by the President.
(2)
if the office of
Controller and Auditor-General is vacant
or if the Controller and Auditor-General is
for any reason
unable to exercise the functions of
his office, the President may appoint a person
to act as Controller and Auditor-General,
and a persons appointed shall, subject to subsections (3), (5) and 7 continue
to act until a person has been appointed to
the office of Controller and Auditor-General
and has assumed the functions of that office
or, as the case may be until the person in
whose place he is acting has resumed those
functions.
(3)
Subject to subsection (5), the Controller and Auditor-General
shall vacate his office when he attains such
age as may be prescribed by Parliament.
(4)
A person holding the office of Controller and Auditor
General
may be Removed from office only for inability
to discharge the functions of his office (whether
arising from infirmity of body or mind or
any other cause) or for misbehaviour, and
shall not be so removed except in accordance
with this section.
(5)
The Controller and Auditor-General shall be removed
from office by the President if the question
of his removal from office has been referred
to a tribunal appointed under subsection (60
and the tribunal has recommended to the President
that he ought to be removed for inability
as aforesaid or for misbehaviour.
(6)
If the President considers that the question of
removing the Controller and Auditor-General
under this section ought to be investigated,
then---
(a)
the President shall appoint a tribunal which shall
consist of a chairman and four other members
selected by the President from among persons---
(i) who hold or have held the office as judge
of the High
Court or judge of appeal; or
(ii)
who are qualified to be appointed as judges of the High Court under section 61 (3); or
(iii)
upon whom the rank of Senior Counsel has been conferred
by the President under section 17 of the Advocates
Act, 1989; and
(b)
the tribunal shall inquire into the matter and report
on the facts thereof to the President and
recommend to him whether the Controller and
Auditor-General ought to be removed under
this section.
(7)
if the question of removing Controller and Auditor-General
has been referred to a tribunal under this
section, the President may suspend the Controller
and Auditor-General from the exercise of the
functions of his office and any such suspension
may at any time be revoked by the President,
and shall
in any case cease to have effect if
the tribunal recommends to the President that
the Controller and Auditor-General should
not be removed.
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Appointment of Permanent Secretaries,
Ambassadors etc
7 of 1982, s. 8., 14 of 1986, s. 6.
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111. (1) The power to appoint
a person to hold or act in the office of Permanent
Secretary, Secretary to the cabinet or Director
of Personnel shall vest in the President.
(2)
The power to appoint a person to hold or act in
the office
of Ambassador,
High Commissioner or other principal representative
of Kenya in another country, and to remove
from office a person holding or acting in
any such office, shall vest in the President:
Provided
that before exercising a power conferred by
this subsection in relation to a person who
holds an office in the public service, other
than an office to which this subsection applies,
the President shall consult the Public Service
Commission.
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Pensions laws and protection of pensions rights.
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112. (1) The law to be applied
with respect to pension benefits that were
granted to a person before 12th
December, 1963 shall be the law that was in
force at the date on which those benefits
were granted or any law in force at a later
date that is not less favourable to that person.
(2) The law to be applied with
respect to pensions benefits (not being benefits
to which subsection (1) applies) shall---
(a)
In so far as those benefits are wholly in respect
of a period of service as a public officer
that commenced before 12th December
1963, be the law that was in force on 11th
December, 1963; and
(b)
In so far as those benefits are wholly or partly
in respect of a period of service as a public
officer that commenced after 11th
December, 1963, be the law in force
on the date on which that period of
service commenced.
Or any
law in force at a later date that is not less
favourable to that person.
(3) Where
a person is entitled to exercise an option
as to which of two or more laws shall apply
in this case, the law for which he opts shall,
for the purposes of this section, be deemed
to be more favourable to him than the other
law of laws.
(4) All pensions
benefits shall (except to the extent to which,
in the case of benefits under the Provident
Fund Act, the Widows, an orphans’ Pensions
Act, the Asian Widows’ and
Orphans’ Pensions Act and the Asian Officers’ Family
Pensions Act or under any law amending or
replacing any of those Acts, they are a charge
on a fund established by any of those Acts
or by any such law and have been duly paid
out of that fund to the person or authority
to whom payment is due) be charged upon the
Consolidated Fund.
(5)
All sums that, under any of the Acts referred to
in subsection (4) or under any law amending
or replacing any of those Acts, are to be
paid by the Government of Kenya into a fund
established by any of those Acts or by any
such law or are otherwise to be paid by the
Government of Kenya for the purposes of any
of those Acts or any such law shall be charged
upon the Consolidated Fund.
(6)
A person who is entitled to the payment of pensions
benefits and who is ordinarily resident outside
Kenya may, within a reasonable time after
he has received that payment, remit the whole
of it (free from any deduction, charge or
tax made or levied in respect of its remission)
to any country of his choice outside Kenya:
Provided
that nothing in this subsection shall be construed
as preventing—
(i) the
attachment, by order of a court, of a payment
or part of a
payment to
which a person is entitled in satisfaction
of the judgement of a court or pending the
determination of civil proceedings to which
he is a party to the extent to which that
attachment is permitted by the law with respect
to pensions benefits that applies in the case of that person; or
(ii)
the imposition of reasonable restrictions as to
the manner in which a payment is to be remitted.
(7)
In this
section “pension benefits” means any pensions,
compensation, gratuities or other like allowances
for persons in respect of their service as
public officers or for the widows, children,
dependants or personal representatives of
those persons in respect of that service.
(8)
References in this section to the law with respect
to pensions benefits include (without prejudice
to their generality) references to the law
regulating the circumstance in which those
benefits may be granted or in which the grant
of those benefits may be refused, the law
regulating the circumstances in which any
such benefits that have been granted may be
withheld, reduced in amount or suspended and
the law regulating the amount of any such
benefits.
(9)
For the purposes of this section---
(a) an office
in any naval, military or air force established
by or under any law made by a legislature
in Kenya
(b) to the
extent to which pensions benefits in respect
of service in such an office are payable under
any of the Acts referred to in subsection
(4) or under any law amending or replacing
any of those Acts, an office in the service
of the East Africa High Commission, the East
African Community Services Organization or
the East African Community; and
(c) an office
in the service of any of the following bodies
(which are bodies that are no longer in existence
but in respect of former service in which
pensions are payable out of Kenya funds)---
(i) the
Combined Posts and Telegraphs Department of Kenya and Uganda;
(ii) the Amalgamated
Posts and Telegraphs Department of Kenya,
Uganda and Tanganyika
(iii) the Customs
Department (Kenya and Uganda) ;
(iv) the Kenya
and Uganda Join Imports Control Organization;
(v) the Joint
Income Tax Department
(vi) the Kenya
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve;
(vii) the Northern
Brigade, King’s African Rifles;
(viii) the Zanzibar
Branch Audit Office;
(ix) the following
departments of the Conference of East African
Governors---
(a)
the Secretariat:
(b)
the British East Africa Meteorological Service;
(c)
the Statistical Section;
(d)
the East African Production and Supply Council;
(e)
The East African War Supplies Board;
(f)
the East African Directorate of Civil Aviation;
and
(g)
the Directorate of Training
shall
be regarded as an office in the public service.
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Power to with hold
pensions, etc.
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113.
(1) Where under any law a person authority
has a discretion---
(a)
to decide whether or not any pensions benefits shall
be granted; or
(b)
to withhold, reduce in amount or suspend any such
benefits that have been granted, those benefits
shall be granted and may not be withheld reduced
in amount or suspended unless the Public Service
Commission concurs in the refusal to grant
the benefits or, as the case may be, in the
decision to withhold them, reduce them in
amount or suspend them.
(2)
Where the amount of any pensions benefits that may
be granted to a person is not fixed by law,
the amount of the benefits to be granted to
him shall be the greatest amount for which
he is eligible unless the Public Service Commission
concurs in his being granted benefits of a
smaller amount.
(3)
The Public Service Commission shall not concur under
subsection (1) or subsection (2) in any action
taken on the ground that a person who holds
or has held the office of judge of the High
Court, judge of any court of Appeal exercising
jurisdiction in Kenya, Attorney-General or
Controller and Auditor-General has been guilty
of misbehaviour in that office unless he has
been removed from that office by reason of
his misbehaviour.
(4)
Before the Public Service Commission concurs under
subsection (1) or subsection (2) in any action
taken on the ground that a person who holds
or has held any office to which, at the time
of the action, section 69 applies has been
guilty of misbehaviour in that office, the
Public Service Commission shall consult the
Judicial Service Commission.
(5)
In this section “pensions benefits” means any pensions,
compensation,
gratuities or other similar allowances for
persons
in respect of their service as public allowances
for
persons
in respect of their service as public officers
or for
the widows,
children, dependants or personal
representatives
of those persons in respect of that service.
(6)
For the purposes of this section an office shall
be regarded as an office in the public service
that is by virtue of section 112 (9) regarded
as an office in the public service for the
purposes of that section.
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